Good to hear from you brother.
Tune of the Day
There are many fine versions of this tune, but this one gets me dancing, clapping, fist-pounding, whatever, every time....and it's not easy to dance in, what, 9/8? I love tunes that grow, build, develop, and move through changes. This one just picks me up and takes me right along with it. Great melding of jazz and rock idioms, too. It's fun to imagine Dave Brubeck setting the groove and then sitting back to hear where his kids and their friends take it.
You can continue exploring Dave and the kids on Two Generations of Brubeck, "The Great Spirit Made Us All". And Chris Brubeck's rock/jazz band Sky King on "Secret Sauce".
For extra credit, give a "spin" to Chase, "Bochawa" from their last album, Pure Music.
Anyway, that's my two cents today.
Make that "Tunes" of the day... More Chris Stamey... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_Bq-qOWR98&list=PLYL498f3nNF6Fxi6ryo_uJLjQb-XTV_hC&index=8&... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfQCQkXfKfg&t=0s&index=10&list=PLYL498f3nNF6Fxi6ryo_uJLj... |
YES - "Parallels" from "Going For The One" Simply Bad A$$ Organ Rock! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ncAk15x0l8Y |
"As If We Would Never Love Again" on Jim Lauderdale’s Onward Through It All album. A great, great song (chord progressions, melody) from a "perfect" album (not a single bad song. Jim is a master songwriter, his songs having been recorded and made hits by a LOT of other singers. Look him up!), played by some of the best musicians in the world (none of whom you’ve heard of ;-) as a shuffle with a subtle swing feel, complete with walking bass, a favorite of mine. I dig how the drummer switches from playing cross-stick on the snare drum on the first verse, to the tip of the stick on the drumhead on the second verse. Taste and class! Superb pedal steel playing, lead guitar parts and tone to die for (in the mold of James Burton), acoustic piano played honky-tonk style, nice harmony parts to compliment Jim’s great singing of the melody. What’s not to love? For those of you raised on Rock but now drawn to some Americana or Alt-Country artists or bands, this is how the music is played by men, rather than boys ;-) . |
One of the better new songs I've heard in the last 5 years or so...... The Belfast Cowboys - "Looking for the Northern Lights" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3q2IHGxwJnQ |
Sure do, @slaw. New West Records had a great sale back in November, and I picked up the Hiatt LP as well as the new ones by Rodney Crowell and Richard Thompson for $13.99 each, plus the Court Yard Hounds (the two sisters from The Dixie Chicks) LP for $7.98 and the Crazy Heart soundtrack on LP for $9.98. And three John Hiatt albums on CD for $3.99 each! New West has a really fine roster of artists; in addition to the above, it includes the great Buddy Miller, Steve Earle (as well as his son, Justin Townes), J.D. McPherson, The Secret Sisters (produced by T Bone Burnett), and Lilly Hiatt (Johns daughter, I presume ;-). |
While listening to the Jim Lauderdale track, you should hopefully become aware of the feeling that the players are "holding back". It’s a hard thing to describe and quantify, but it’s what separates the men from the boys in the area of musicianship. By playing just a little "late", a hair "behind" the middle of the "pocket", a great deal of musical tension is created, a feeling of anticipation. When that tension is finally released, it’s SO satisfying! That tension-and-release is very sexual, if I may be slightly vulgar. The tension is also maintained by the musicians refraining from playing any superfluous notes. As the old Jazz guys always said, the notes you don’t play are as important as those you do. For you Rockers, think of "I Can See For Miles" by The Who, and "Skakin’ All Over" by The Guess Who (The Who’s version on Live At Leeds is all about release, missing the tension created by The Guess Who. Compare the two versions!). This style of playing is referred to by some as laid-back (often said somewhat pejoratively by those who don’t understand or appreciate it), and is for some reason a specialty of southern U.S.A. musicians. That is why Dylan started recording in Nashville in 1965, and why Jerry Wexler took Aretha, Dusty, Wilson Pickett, and other Atlantic Records singers down to Muscle Shoals in 1968-9. Wilson said he walked into the studio and saw these white crackers sitting around, and thought to himself, "Jerry, what have you got me into?" He says then the band (known as The Swampers) started playing, and he couldn’t believe what he was hearing---the funkiest band he had ever heard! The drummer, Roger Hawkins, is a favorite of mine (and of Jim Keltner, who says he wishes he played more like Roger) who was enticed out of the studio by Steve Winwood for a stint in Traffic. As good a musical drummer as I have ever heard. Jim Lauderdale has that kind of taste in musicians. |
Something I neglected to mention about Jim Lauderdale, something that might break down any resistance some have to listening to someone as Country as Jim (I realize a fair number of Rockers have an aversion to the genre): When I saw Lucinda Williams on her Car Wheels tour, Jim served as her bandleader/harmony singer/acoustic guitarist. He stood beside her on stage, playing his acoustic, singing harmony, providing what appeared to be moral support (she’s not the most confident of live performers), and leading the band (which included the great drummer Jim Christie, who quit Dwight Yoakam’s band to join hers). Jim hosts the annual Americana Music Awards Show, and lately has been involved with another favorite music maker of mine, Buddy Miller. I’m tellin’ ya, the guy is ridiculously talented. |